Parsley, Adam Smith et al: let’s not get truculent here.
What Cargill is doing is exactly what it should under the circumstances. It’s trying to protect its bottom line. It has made some sales to brewers at malt prices set by the CWB – and it has covered those sales from the CWB. And now the CWB is making noises that it won’t stand behind the contracts because of a little problem – it might have to compete for the grain and, oh yeah, the prices are ridiculously low. (If the CWB had high priced sales on the books, do you really think it would have threatened to walk away from them?)
The real culprit here is the CWB. Making noises that it won’t honour those contracts, the CWB is sending a signal to the likes of Cargill as well as the government and all you pro-choice farmers.
Parsley – I suspect that Cargill is looking at this situation – entering a commercial contract in good faith only to find the deal has been changed on them – in the same way you look at the Buy-Back with the CWB on organic sales. Upon entry it looks ok, but when the dust has settled, it costs you thousands more than you first thought. Neither way is any way to run a business.
Adam Smith – if you had bought fertilizer at $600/tonne but the supplier threatened to pull out of the deal before it was delivered because the market was now $1000 – how would you react?
In previous threads many ideas and concerns about contracting in the barley market were presented. Everyone seemed to be in agreement that you have to pin down as many details as you possibly can – try to consider any eventuality – avoid surprises (read the small print). All good ideas. And Cargill would agree with them all. In this situation, they are simply saying to the CWB, “we have a deal – stick to it”. If it was the other way around, Cargill certainly would without question.
What Cargill is doing is exactly what it should under the circumstances. It’s trying to protect its bottom line. It has made some sales to brewers at malt prices set by the CWB – and it has covered those sales from the CWB. And now the CWB is making noises that it won’t stand behind the contracts because of a little problem – it might have to compete for the grain and, oh yeah, the prices are ridiculously low. (If the CWB had high priced sales on the books, do you really think it would have threatened to walk away from them?)
The real culprit here is the CWB. Making noises that it won’t honour those contracts, the CWB is sending a signal to the likes of Cargill as well as the government and all you pro-choice farmers.
Parsley – I suspect that Cargill is looking at this situation – entering a commercial contract in good faith only to find the deal has been changed on them – in the same way you look at the Buy-Back with the CWB on organic sales. Upon entry it looks ok, but when the dust has settled, it costs you thousands more than you first thought. Neither way is any way to run a business.
Adam Smith – if you had bought fertilizer at $600/tonne but the supplier threatened to pull out of the deal before it was delivered because the market was now $1000 – how would you react?
In previous threads many ideas and concerns about contracting in the barley market were presented. Everyone seemed to be in agreement that you have to pin down as many details as you possibly can – try to consider any eventuality – avoid surprises (read the small print). All good ideas. And Cargill would agree with them all. In this situation, they are simply saying to the CWB, “we have a deal – stick to it”. If it was the other way around, Cargill certainly would without question.
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